A large hoofed mammal (Equus caballus) having a short-haired coat, a long mane, and a long tail, domesticated since ancient times and used for riding and for drawing or carrying loads.
An adult male horse; a stallion.
Any of various equine mammals, such as the wild Asian species E. przewalskii or certain extinct forms related ancestrally to the modern horse.
A frame or device, usually with four legs, used for supporting or holding.
Sports A vaulting horse.
Slang for "Heroin".
Horsepower. Often used in the plural.
Mounted soldiers; cavalry: a squadron of horse.
Geology A block of rock interrupting a vein and containing no minerals.
Geology A large block of displaced rock that is caught along a fault.
To provide with a horse.
To haul or hoist energetically: "Things had changed little since the days of the pyramids, with building materials being horsed into place by muscle power” ( Henry Allen).
To be in heat. Used of a mare.
Of or relating to a horse: a horse blanket.
Mounted on horses: horse guards.
Drawn or operated by a horse.
Larger or cruder than others that are similar: horse pills.
horse around Informal To indulge in horseplay or frivolous activity: Stop horsing around and get to work.
another Another matter entirely; something else.
beat To continue to pursue a cause that has no hope of success.
beat To dwell tiresomely on a matter that has already been decided.
be To be or become disdainful, superior, or conceited.
hold (one's) horses To restrain oneself.
the horse's mouth A source of information regarded as original or unimpeachable.